---
title: Jobs
label: Jobs
order: 40
desc: A Job is a set of work that is offloaded from your APIs and will be processed at a later date.
keywords: jobs queue, application framework, typescript, node, react, nextjs
---

Now that we have covered Tasks and Workflows, we can tie them together with a concept called a Job.

<Banner type="default">
  Whereas you define Workflows and Tasks, which control your business logic, a <strong>Job</strong> is an individual instance of either a Task or a Workflow which contains many tasks.
</Banner>

For example, let's say we have a Workflow or Task that describes the logic to sync information from Payload to a third-party system. This is how you'd declare how to sync that info, but it wouldn't do anything on its own. In order to run that task or workflow, you'd create a Job that references the corresponding Task or Workflow.

Jobs are stored in the Payload database in the `payload-jobs` collection, and you can decide to keep a running list of all jobs, or configure Payload to delete the job when it has been successfully executed.

#### Queuing a new job

In order to queue a job, you can use the `payload.jobs.queue` function.

Here's how you'd queue a new Job, which will run a `createPostAndUpdate` workflow:

```ts
const createdJob = await payload.jobs.queue({
  // Pass the name of the workflow
  workflow: 'createPostAndUpdate',
  // The input type will be automatically typed
  // according to the input you've defined for this workflow
  input: {
    title: 'my title',
  },
})
```

In addition to being able to queue new Jobs based on Workflows, you can also queue a job for a single Task:

```ts
const createdJob = await payload.jobs.queue({
  task: 'createPost',
  input: {
    title: 'my title',
  },
})
```
